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The Story of Mankind [161]

By Root 2364 0

As for poor John Fitch, the man who long before any one

else had used the ``steam-boat'' for commercial purposes, he

came to a sad death. Broken in health and empty of purse, he

had come to the end of his resources when his fifth boat, which

was propelled by means of a screw-propeller, had been destroyed.

His neighbours jeered at him as they were to laugh a

hundred years later when Professor Langley constructed his

funny flying machines. Fitch had hoped to give his country

an easy access to the broad rivers of the west and his countrymen

preferred to travel in flat-boats or go on foot. In the year

1798, in utter despair and misery, Fitch killed himself by taking

poison.



But twenty years later, the ``Savannah,'' a steamer of 1850

tons and making six knots an hour, (the Mauretania goes just

four times as fast,) crossed the ocean from Savannah to Liverpool

in the record time of twenty-five days. Then there was

an end to the derision of the multitude and in their enthusiasm

the people gave the credit for the invention to the wrong man.



Six years later, George Stephenson, a Scotchman, who had

been building locomotives for the purpose of hauling coal from

the mine-pit to smelting ovens and cotton factories, built his

famous ``travelling engine'' which reduced the price of coal by

almost seventy per cent and which made it possible to establish

the first regular passenger service between Manchester and

Liverpool, when people were whisked from city to city at the

unheard-of speed of fifteen miles per hour. A dozen years

later, this speed had been increased to twenty miles per hour.

At the present time, any well-behaved flivver (the direct descendant

of the puny little motor-driven machines of Daimler

and Levassor of the eighties of the last century) can do better

than these early ``Puffing Billies.''



But while these practically-minded engineers were improving

upon their rattling ``heat engines,'' a group of ``pure''

scientists (men who devote fourteen hours of each day to the

study of those ``theoretical'' scientific phenomena without which

no mechanical progress would be possible) were following a

new scent which promised to lead them into the most secret and

hidden domains of Nature.



Two thousand years ago, a number of Greek and Roman

philosophers (notably Thales of Miletus and Pliny who was

killed while trying to study the eruption of Vesuvius of the

year 79 when Pompeii and Herculaneum were buried beneath

the ashes) had noticed the strange antics of bits of straw and of

feather which were held near a piece of amber which was being

rubbed with a bit of wool. The schoolmen of the Middle Ages

had not been interested in this mysterious ``electric'' power.

But immediately after the Renaissance, William Gilbert, the

private physician of Queen Elizabeth, wrote his famous treatise

on the character and behaviour of Magnets. During the

Thirty Years War Otto von Guericke, the burgomaster of

Magdeburg and the inventor of the air-pump, constructed the

first electrical machine. During the next century a large number

of scientists devoted themselves to the study of electricity.

Not less than three professors invented the famous Leyden

Jar in the year 1795. At the same time, Benjamin Franklin,

the most universal genius of America next to Benjamin Thomson

(who after his flight from New Hampshire on account of

his pro-British sympathies became known as Count Rumford)

was devoting his attention to this subject. He discovered that

lightning and the electric spark were manifestations of the same

electric power and continued his electric studies until the end of

his busy and useful life. Then came Volta with his famous

``electric pile'' and Galvani and Day and the Danish professor

Hans Christian Oersted and Ampere and Arago and Faraday,

all of them diligent searchers after the true nature of the electric

forces.



They freely gave their
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